Apple has filed a letter brief, redacted, asking the court for an order compelling Psystar to turn over financial documents in discovery and to designate a knowledgeable person to testify as to Psystar's finances. They've been asking for a while, and they did a deposition with the CEO of Psystar, but they tell the judge it didn't work out well, since over 90 times he said he didn't know or couldn't recall even basic things.

Here's Apple's motion to seal confidential portions of the letter brief. The confidential parts have to do with "Psystar Corporation's financial information or testimony regarding its finances".

The unredacted portions of the letter brief show Apple telling the judge that Psystar's CEO and founder Rudy Pedraza "would not answer basic questions about Psystar's financials... Mr. Pedraza... stated approximately 90 times during the deposition that he did not know or recall answers to basic questions about Psystar's sales, its general costs and profits, its costs and profits by product line, how it determine it prices and profit margins"...

So Apple requests from the court an order compelling Psystar to produce "financial documents sufficient to determine Psystar's revenues, costs, profits, assets and liabilities." Apple would also like the order to include making Psystar make available "a knowledgeable 30(b)(6) designee" for another deposition "at Psystar's expense" on the topic. And it wants its costs covered for having to redo the deposition as a result of Psystar's "inordinate failure to produce and testify".

Psystar has some documents in particular that Apple wants regarding financial projections that Apple noticed attached to some emails that were turned over in discovery, but Psystar, Apple says, turned the emails over without the attachments. Oops. Send their lawyers to discovery dungeon. Seriously. If you are going to withhold, not that one should, you'd think they'd withhold the entire email, not turn over emails that show there were attachments that are not being turned over too.

Update: The judge has now scheduled a hearing for next week, according to World of Apple:

Within the past few hours, he issued an Order Scheduling a Hearing on the Discovery Disputes to take place on May 5, 2009. He further ordered that Psystar must respond to Apple’s allegations by May 4, 2009.